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Published March 26, 2008 09:45 pm - Building Partnerships for People and Nature: the search for sustainable economic policy in a smart park.

Finding common ground in the Adirondacks


By KIM SMITH DEDAM
Staff Writer

LAKE PLACID -- A new steering committee is charged with driving policy toward an economically viable Adirondack future.

Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Pete Grannis introduced the 11-person panel this week after handing out $1 million in freshly signed Smart Growth grants.

The new planning group -- essentially a think tank feeding DEC stewardship of the 6.5 million-acre park -- is billed as Partnerships for People and Nature.

MOVING FORWARD

The new Adirondack-wide, government-civic panel mirrors a challenge sparked by several regional groups in the past year.

"We kicked off this steering committee to help keep moving issues forward to solution," said DEC Region 5 Director Betsy Lowe. "DEC is here at their pleasure to facilitate."

The committee is built of experts who sometimes sit on opposite sides of a table: Brian Houseal, executive director of the Adirondack Council; Town Supervisors Noel Merrihew III from Elizabethtown and Bill Farber from Morehouse in Hamilton County; Bill Johnston, former county planner now on the Adirondack Community Housing Trust; Cali Brooks, executive director of Adirondack Community Trust; Ron Ofner, newly assigned executive director of the Adirondack Regional Tourism Council; and John Mills, president of Paul Smith's College.

They listened to suggestions from about 50 state, civic and business leaders a few hours ahead of the kickoff APA Local Government Day reception.

PLANNING CONCERNS

Houseal asked a question that rose above the din.

"Is the Forest Preserve an asset or a liability to the people of the Adirondacks?"

Fred Monroe, executive director of the Adirondack Local Government Review Board, said roads and planning are key sticking points in most every issue.

Monroe called attention to the way roads are closed by state agencies, when there is "a well-established method" for closing them at the town level.

He called Adirondack planning "a process focused on the environment and environmental quality review" and put affordable housing at the top of the crisis list.

"It's crystal clear to me," he said, "you cannot have affordable housing in (land zoned) Resource Management on 42.7 acres per principle dwelling."



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